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Development

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Three Minute Review NONVERBAL COMMUNICATION eye contact body language gestures why do people gesture on the phone? interactional synchrony deception LANGUAGE ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Development


1
Development
2
Three Minute Review
  • NONVERBAL COMMUNICATION
  • eye contact
  • body language
  • gestures
  • why do people gesture on the phone?
  • interactional synchrony
  • deception
  • LANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT
  • Skinner vs. Chomsky
  • operant conditioning vs. language instinct
  • childrens overgeneralization
  • grammatical errors and Wug test

3
  • LANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT
  • critical periods
  • 6 months for learning phonemes
  • 6 years for learning grammar
  • language learning in animals
  • lower larynx enables human speech
  • apes have to use ASL or symbolic language
  • debate about whether its really language

4
Test Yourself
  • A child who uses the word wawa to refer not
    only to water but to milk, juice and other drinks
    is
  • overextending the word
  • underextending the word
  • demonstrating conditioning of the word wawa
    with any liquid
  • babbling
  • autistic

5
Development
  • Physical Development
  • Cognitive Development
  • Social Development

6
Brain Development
7
Brain Development
  • during pregnancy, the brain can be highly
    susceptible to teratogens
  • radiation, drugs, viruses, toxins
  • explanation for morning sickness?
  • fetal alcohol syndrome
  • cluster of defects occurring in infants born to
    mothers that drink heavily during pregnancy
  • leading cause of mental retardation
  • even moderate drinking (e.g., three beers a day)
    may lead to children with a lower IQ and shorter
    attention span

8
Neural Development
  • Grow, then prune
  • Neural Darwinism
  • make too many neurons, then prune the ones youre
    not using
  • use it or lose it
  • there are 30-60 more neurons in the fetus than
    in the adult brain

9
Myelinization
  • basic sensory and motor areas become myelinated
    early
  • association areas become myelinated later

10
Cognitive Development
  • The infants world is a blooming, buzzing
    confusion
  • -- William James
  • How can you study perception and cognition in a
    non-verbal being (preverbal child, animal)?
  • Visual tracking
  • Preferential looking
  • Eye movement monitoring
  • Habituation
  • Sucking

11
Visual Tracking
  • newborns will track facelike stimuli
  • innate preference for faces?

12
Orienting and Habituation
  • Orienting reflex
  • humans, including infants, pay more attention to
    novel than familiar stimuli
  • Habituation
  • infants get bored with repeated presentations of
    the same thing
  • Habituation paradigm
  • repeat the same stimulus over and over again,
    then change it slightly
  • does infant spend more time looking at new
    stimulus?

13
Preferential Looking
  • present two stimuli on either side of centre
  • watch where infants look
  • in the best studies, the mom and experimenter are
    blind to the stimuli
  • spontaneous looking preferences
  • e.g., infants prefer high contrast
  • habituation
  • familiarize infant with one stimulus, then
    present it in combination with a new stimulus
  • infant looks more at new stimulus ? infant could
    tell the difference
  • infant looks equally at old and new stimuli ?
    infant couldnt tell the difference

14
What have we learned?
  • Although newborns can see faces, faces must
    appear very blurry to them

15
Eye Movements
  • newborns look at outside features of faces
  • older infants, like adults, spend much time
    looking at eyes and mouth

16
Behavior
  • Visual Cliff
  • Will the baby crawl over the glass to get to mom?
  • mobile infants wont
  • pre-mobile infants did not appear bothered when
    placed on the glass

17
Sucking Response
  • newborns suck more when they hear their native
    language
  • newborns suck more when they hear their moms
    voice

18
Critical Periods
(See Gray, pp. 135)
Konrad Lorenz 1903-1989
  • Imprinting
  • baby ducks and goslings will follow on the first
    individual they encounter, even if its a human
    rather than the mother
  • imprinting must happen within five days after
    hatching

Critical period A period in development during
which some event has a long-lasting influence on
the brain and behavior that it would not have if
it occurred outside that period
19
Does Development Occur Continuously or in Stages?
20
Jean Piaget
  • Piaget, a Swiss psychologist, believed that
    children are active thinkers, constantly trying
    to construct more advanced understandings of the
    world
  • These understandings are in the form of
    structures he called schemes

Jean Piaget 1896-1980
21
Assimilation and Accomodation
  • Schemes are frameworks that develop to help
    organize knowledge
  • Assimilation - process of taking new information
    or a new experience and fitting it into an
    already existing scheme
  • Accommodation - process by which existing schemes
    are changed or new schemes are created in order
    to fit new information

22
Piagets Approach
  • Primary method was to ask children to solve
    problems and to question them about the reasoning
    behind their solutions
  • Discovered that children think in radically
    different ways than adults
  • Proposed that development occurs as a series of
    stages differing in how the world is understood

23
Sensorimotor Stagebirth - 2 years
  • Information is gained through the senses and
    motor actions (looking, touching, mouthing)
  • In this stage child perceives and manipulates but
    does not reason
  • Infant gradually becomes aware of relationship
    between own actions and their effects on
    environment
  • Object permanence is acquired

24
Sensorimotor Development
25
Object Permanence
  • 8 - 10 mos. Infant begins to understand that
    objects exist even when not in view

26
Preoperational Stage2 - 7 years
  • Represents things with words and images but lacks
    logical reasoning
  • Can think symbolically (e.g., pretending a stick
    is a gun)
  • Thinking is egocentric has difficulty taking the
    viewpoint of others
  • Fails to understand conservation

What does the doll see?
27
Conservation of Number
Is there the same number in each row?
28
Conservation of Length
Which stick is longer?
29
Conservation of Volume
Which container has the most volume
30
Conservation of Mass
Which is bigger?
31
Concrete Operational Stage7-12 years
  • Can think logically about objects and events
  • Can see others perspective
  • Achieves conservation of number (age 6), mass
    (age 7) and weight (age 9)

32
Formal Operational Stage11 years and up
  • Can think logically about abstract propositions
    and test hypotheses systematically
  • Can understand hypothetical propositions
  • e.g., If all animals can fly and if rhinoceroses
    are animals, then all rhinoceroses can fly.
  • Becomes concerned with the the future and
    ideological problems
  • Not achieved by all adults

33
Critiques of Piagetian Theory
  • Underestimates childrens abilities
  • Overestimates age differences in thinking
  • Vagueness about the process of change
  • Underestimates the role of the social environment
  • tests were done on Western European kids
  • Vygotsky argued culture and social interaction
    were critical to development
  • Lack of evidence for qualitatively different
    stages
  • Not well integrated with neuroscience

34
Contradictory Experiments
  • In preferential looking experiments, 4 month old
    infants who did not demonstrate object permanence
    nonetheless looked longer at an unexpected
    occlusion event
  • Preoperational children chose the column with
    more MMs

35
Information Processing Perspective
  • Focuses on the mind as a system, analogous to a
    computer, for analyzing information from the
    environment
  • Developmental improvements reflect
  • increased capacity of working memory
  • faster speed of processing
  • new algorithms (methods)
  • more stored knowledge
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